By

Ryan Jaslow /

CBS News/ February 12, 2013, 11:20 AM

Cutting salt to recommended levels could prevent hundreds of thousands deaths

iStockphoto

Too much sodium can raise a person's risk for high blood pressure, heart disease, stroke and other vascular diseases, and government estimates show 90 percent of Americans exceed their recommended daily allotment.

Now, new research shows that by reducing sodium intake to recommended levels or beyond could prevent hundreds of thousands of deaths.

"No matter how we look at it, the story is the same - there will be huge benefits in reducing sodium," study author Dr. Pam Coxson, mathematician UC San Francisco who performed one of three analyses included in the study, told UCSF News.

Americans on average consume about 3,600 milligrams of sodium each day, mostly from table salt (or sodium chloride), which is found primarily in processed foods. The top six sources of sodium in the American diet according to the American Heart Association, or "The Salty Six" are bread and rolls, cold cuts and cured meats, pizza, poultry, soup and sandwiches. The government recommends a limit of 2,300 milligrams per day of sodium and 1,500 milligrams for those 51 and older while the AHA recommends 1,500 milligrams each day.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said that excess sodium is one of the factors that can raise the risk for heart disease. For the month of February, National Heart Month, the CDC offers 28 tips for a healthier heart.

For the study, researchers at three medical schools each conducted their own analysis to project the health effects over a 10 year period from reducing sodium intake by three increments: a gradual 40 percent reduction in sodium to 2,200 milligrams per day, an instant reduction in sodium to 2,200 milligrams per day, or an instant reduction to no more than the AHA-recommended 1,500 milligrams of sodium per day.

The researchers from UCSF, Harvard Medical School in Boston and Simon Fraser University in British Columbia Canada each used different simulation models looking at different outcomes but they reached similar conclusions: Reducing salt from diets was projected to save lots of American lives.

9 Photos

Fatty foods: Xtreme Eating Awards 2013

They found a gradual sodium reduction of as little as 5 percent of a teaspoon of salt per day, eventually reaching 2,200 milligrams of sodium per day, was projected to save between 280,000 and 500,000 lives over a 10-year-period. A plummet from current U.S. sodium intake averages to 1,500 milligrams per day could prevent 700,000 to 1.2 million deaths over a decade.

By instantly reducing sodium intake by 40 percent to the recommended allotment, the researchers found between 500,000 and 850,000 premature deaths could be averted -- about 60 percent more deaths than saved in the gradual reduction model.

The study was published online Feb. 11 in the AHA journal, Hypertension.

"It is helpful when three research groups use different approaches and come up with similar results," study co-author Dr. Kirsten Bibbins-Domingo, director of the UCSF Center for Vulnerable Populations, said in a press release. "Such gradual [sodium] reductions could be achieved through a combination of consumer education and food labeling, but should likely also include regulation to assure that lower sodium options are available for US consumers."

Play Video

Food companies join fight to lower sodium

Several companies have already begun voluntarily reducing salt from their products.

New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg announced Feb. 12 that 21 food and restaurant companies had voluntarily reduced the salt content in some of their products as part of the National Salt Reduction Initiative. Examples included Kraft reducing sodium in its Kraft Singles American Slices by 18 percent, Unilever cutting sodium by 20 percent for its Ragu Old World Style Traditional Tomato Sauce, and Subway reducing sodium by about 30 percent from its Italian B.M.T. and Subway Club sandwiches.

© 2013 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
  • Ryan Jaslow On Google+ »

    Ryan Jaslow is CBSNews.com's health editor.

7 Comments Add a Comment
linkicon reporticon emailicon
MaxK341 says:
This is utter nonsense. Deaths can't be prevented. Every human that is presently alive on this planet is destined to die in their own way. Leave well enough alone.
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
Nate650 says:
This is complete baloney. Salt is not the problem when you have massive amounts of industrial foods containing crap like trans fats, high fructose corn syrup, artificial preservatives, and refined vegetable oils. As FOO8259 pointed out, salt and fat (unless the fat is artificial trans fat) are not the problem.
reply
Baggman744 replies:
linkicon reporticon emailicon
You forgot to mention "Franken Food", AKA GMOs. There are endless studies over many decades that show high sodium intake is detrimental to your health. There are absolutely no, none what-so-ever, benefit to a high sodium diet. So why chance it? Sure, salt makes foods taste more like themselves, but moderation is the key. Its mostly processed/ fast foods that use high amounts of sodium, so just avoid them.
linkicon reporticon emailicon
superdem1 says:
It's a good idea to cook your own foods, then you can control how much salt is in it. Canned items still contain a lot of salt as a preservative but you can rinse some of that out. The cooking shows are pretty bad about salt, these top chefs heavily salt their foods, but you don't have to, it's still delicious. You can learn to like the way food actually tastes, free of all that salt ! Other herbs and seasonings are actually good for you, like turmeric and cumin. Curries are great. Eat out now and then for fun, we're not in a monastery.
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
[oweghn says:
"They found a gradual sodium reduction of as little as 5 percent of a teaspoon of salt per day, eventually reaching 2,200 milligrams of sodium per day, was projected to save between 280,000 and 500,000 lives over a 10-year-period. A plummet from current U.S. sodium intake averages to 1,500 milligrams per day could prevent 700,000 to 1.2 million deaths over a decade."
I know no one wants to hear it, but this puts the gun death problem in perspective. Cut down on the salt you use and save more lives than are lost to guns.
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
oldoc44 says:
Just consider how much salt-laden fast food and "prepared" products are consumed eagerly and daily. It's part of who we are... just like sugar.
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
foo8259 says:
Once again barking up the wrong tree. It's sugar and starch (grains) that are the major diet health issue in America -- not fat and sodium.
reply